Cultivating Agentic Teacher Identities in the Field of a Teacher Education Program

  • Block L
  • Betts P
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Abstract

Teacher candidates’ individual and collaborative inquiry occurs within multiple and layered contexts of learning. The layered contexts support a strong connection between the practicum and the university and the emergent teaching identities. Our understanding of teacher identity is as situated and socially constructed, yet fluid and agentic. This paper explores how agentic teaching identities emerge within the layered contexts of our teacher education program as examined in five narratives of teacher candidates’ experience. These narratives involve tension, inquiry, successes and risks, as teacher candidates negotiate what is means to learn how to teach, to teach and to critically reflect on knowledge needed to teach. We conclude that navigating teacher identity is a teacher candidate capacity that could be explicitly cultivated by teacher education programs.

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APA

Block, L. A., & Betts, P. (2016). Cultivating Agentic Teacher Identities in the Field of a Teacher Education Program. Brock Education Journal, 25(2). https://doi.org/10.26522/brocked.v25i2.502

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